A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Christians and war revisited

Doug Bandow has an article worth reading on Christians and the Iraq war.

I think we see here one of the problems with Just War theory, a problem that many pacifists have pointed out, namely that it can be so flexible as to (rhetorically at least) justify virtually any war.

However, Just War adherents obviously think that pacifism is too high a price to pay for a bright, clear line about when to go to war. But Bandow articulates what some JW thinkers have called the presumption against the use of force:

Christians should be particularly humble before advocating war. War means killing, of innocent and criminal alike. It means destroying the social stability and security that creates an environment conducive for people to worship God, raise families, create communities, work productively, and achieve success – in short, to enjoy safe and satisfying lives. Wars rarely turn out as expected, and the unintended consequences, as in Iraq, often are catastrophic.

Indeed, in Iraq the U.S. has essentially killed hundreds of thousands of people in the name of humanitarianism. Christians, even more than their unbelieving neighbors, should be pained by the horror of sectarian conflict unleashed by the actions of their government with their support. Believers especially should eschew nationalistic triumphalism in pursuit of war. And when they err, like predicting health, wealth, liberty, and happiness in occupied Iraq, they should acknowledge fault – and seek forgiveness. At the very least they should exhibit humility before saddling their white horses to begin another crusade.

I tried to make a similar point here, specifically with respect to proposed humanitarian interventions. A lot depends on whether we see war as an extraordinary last resort, or as a routine tool of statecraft. Andrew Bacevich and others have argued that Americans have come to see war as the latter, with disastrous results. And Bandow is surely right the Christians, even if they’re not pacifists, should be wary of war and set the bar high for supporting it.

4 responses to “Christians and war revisited”

  1. I happen to agree with the main point, but this struck me as going too far:

    Indeed, in Iraq the U.S. has essentially killed hundreds of thousands of people in the name of humanitarianism.

    The US? I hope he means indirectly rather than directly? The vast majority of those killed are the direct victims of car bombers and militias, not of American forces.

  2. Jack, I doubt that is true. It has been calculated that US forces fire 1 million bullets in anger in Iraq per day. Some of those are killing people.

  3. For what it’s worth, there was a study last fall claiming 600,000 deaths occurring as a result of the war, with 31 percent directly caused by coalition troops, though some doubt was cast upon the methodology:

    http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1012/dailyUpdate.html

  4. The methodology was standard for estimating casualties in a war zone. Eventually, the British government was forced to admit as much. Of course, the headline figures conceal huge uncertainties about the numbers. We still have deaths directly caused by Coalition forces likely in the six digits.

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